FOUR CERTAINTIES ABOUT THE FUTURE (2 OF 2)
by Roger Thomas
Scripture: LUKE 16:19-31
This content is part of a series.
Four Certainties About The Future (2 of 2)
Series: Easter Victory
Roger Thomas
Luke 16:19-31
I've conducted lots of funerals through years. Most have been quite normal. A few have been a little different. But I never had anything happen quite like the true story I recently read of a young preacher and one of his first funerals. A very elderly man who had formerly lived in the town had died in another state. The funeral was held where he now lived but the burial was to be back home. The funeral home called the young preacher and asked him to have the graveside service. The burial was to be at an old country church cemetery several miles out of town. The funeral director explained that since he hadn't lived in town for years and years, he had no family in the area and likely very few remaining friends. He told the preacher a few words of Scripture and a short prayer would do. He didn't expect anyone else to show up except the funeral home people and the cemetery workers.
On the way to the unfamiliar cemetery, the young preacher got lost. He drove around and around the area. He grew more and more nervous as the scheduled time for the service came and went. Finally, he saw a little church with a cemetery. Sure enough, he could see three men with shovels standing beside a pile of dirt at the edge of a little cemetery behind the church. The hearse was nowhere in sight. He figured the funeral director had given up on him and left. He quickly got out of his car and walked up to the grave. He said to the workmen, ''I see you've already buried the vault, let's pause and let me say a few words and pray before you finish filling in the grave.'' The workmen silently removed their hats, and he began the service. Afterwards, one of the workmen smiled and said, ''Preacher, I don't know who you are, but that's the best funeral service for a septic tank I've ever heard!''
We are in a series of messages for the next few weeks on the theme, ''What happens to a person when ...
Series: Easter Victory
Roger Thomas
Luke 16:19-31
I've conducted lots of funerals through years. Most have been quite normal. A few have been a little different. But I never had anything happen quite like the true story I recently read of a young preacher and one of his first funerals. A very elderly man who had formerly lived in the town had died in another state. The funeral was held where he now lived but the burial was to be back home. The funeral home called the young preacher and asked him to have the graveside service. The burial was to be at an old country church cemetery several miles out of town. The funeral director explained that since he hadn't lived in town for years and years, he had no family in the area and likely very few remaining friends. He told the preacher a few words of Scripture and a short prayer would do. He didn't expect anyone else to show up except the funeral home people and the cemetery workers.
On the way to the unfamiliar cemetery, the young preacher got lost. He drove around and around the area. He grew more and more nervous as the scheduled time for the service came and went. Finally, he saw a little church with a cemetery. Sure enough, he could see three men with shovels standing beside a pile of dirt at the edge of a little cemetery behind the church. The hearse was nowhere in sight. He figured the funeral director had given up on him and left. He quickly got out of his car and walked up to the grave. He said to the workmen, ''I see you've already buried the vault, let's pause and let me say a few words and pray before you finish filling in the grave.'' The workmen silently removed their hats, and he began the service. Afterwards, one of the workmen smiled and said, ''Preacher, I don't know who you are, but that's the best funeral service for a septic tank I've ever heard!''
We are in a series of messages for the next few weeks on the theme, ''What happens to a person when ...
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